Of all the protagonists who are fighting on Cadia, Trazyn the Infinite is without a doubt the strangest. It is curiosity that drives him to Cadia, but he plays an important role in the first volume of the saga, Gathering Storm. Of course, some people are none too happy to see him, such as Belisarius Cawl. In spite of this, the Archmagos understands that the arrival of Trazyn in these dark hours is no mere coincidence. The Necron knows (or claims to know) the secrets of the pylons of Cadia. He also has another role to play, especially when he opens his tesseract crypts and releases his Imperial prisoners to fight the armies of Abaddon. But in this case, how will he make up for his rare collection?

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The Inquisitor Greyfax, Archmagos Belisarius Cawl and Saint Celestine alliance is named 'The Triumvirate of the Imperium':

I got the Army Painter mega paint set for Christmas so I spent all day today laying the layers on Carl, Shane and Carl from The Walking Dead: All Out War. I don't have much experience really but I'm really enjoying painting them. The models feel chunky with areas where you can block in colour really nicely but they still have plenty of detail to them. I think I'm ready to lay down some shades tomorrow but I might touch up one or two of the layers first with an extra coat. I think I'll use a flesh shade for their skin but just go for a dark shade for everything else, rather than coloured shades. Although I haven't yet decided. I like dark shades but now that I have shades of every colour I feel like I should maybe experiment.

Get your first look at the incredible new Lord of Change miniature sculpted by the very talented Mark Harrison (though miniature is maybe not quite be the right word) on its way later this Tzaanuary.

This towering Daemon of Tzeentch stands as tall as a Bloodthirster and sits alongside Magnus, Nagash and the Imperial Knight as one of the most iconic and imposing centerpiece miniatures in the whole Citadel range.Every inch of this model is dripping in detail: esoteric runes, staring eyes, magical books, arcane scrolls and more besides – it’s a painter’s dream, especially when combined with the myriad colour schemes that Tzeentch’s greatest daemonic champions lend themselves to.

The kit can also be used to create Kairos Fateweaver, the notorious and fickle two-headed Daemon of past and future destinies. We’ll have some shots of this build for you very soon.

You can, of course, use this model in games of Warhammer 40,000 or Warhammer Age of Sigmar. For battles in the Mortal Realms, an updated Warscroll for this arcane behemoth will feature in the upcoming Disciples of Tzeentch Battletome.

In Warhammer 40,000, his rules remain unchanged from those in Codex: Chaos Daemons, though the recent War Zone: Fenris books, Curse of the Wulfen and Wrath of Magnus do both contain some new spells, artifacts and Formations he can use, as part of a standard Daemon force or a pure host of Tzeentchian warp-spawn.

Alvin Flummux wrote:Pour some of that dosh into new videogames or other media endeavors, will you? I could use some games set during whatever maelstrom is about to engulf the 40k universe, or the Horus Heresy.

Videogames are entirely a licensing endeavour. Get some decent companies to pay for the IP and you can have whatever you want.

Try painting them black first and try to just highlight the white of the eye with the brush at a sideways angle. You can use a very light grey for that - eyes aren't actually white. Then use a treble gauge hairpoint brush to make the pupil with some black.

We have a tendency to paint eyes much bigger than they are. Make sure they're not too close to the bridge of the nose and that the pupils are symmetrical, it's hard but you can pretend they're looking at something.